My rebus story:
Once there was an upright who loved . His name was Phil. He had a friend who was also an uprightwho also loved .His name was Bob. One day and were starving and ravenous. They decided to go to the .
On the way to the they met up with their friend who was a . They greeted each other and Phil and Bob told their friend the their sad story of how they have to drive all the way to the . Their friend the offered to go to the for them. At the he saw the and got their autograph. When he got to and 's house, they saw the autograph and were angry that he did not get one for him. They were so jealous that they decided to rip it to . When he heard about what and had done he was mad at them and ignored them. After a while and began to feel sorry for what they had done. That's when they realized that they should not do mean things to friends
Rick Kubly
Reading 7
December 15, 2010
• My family goes to Captiva Island, off the coast of Florida, with some friends
• My dad decides to take his friend, his friend’s son named Will, and me on a fishing trip a couple of miles into the calm waters of the Gulf of Mexico
• All four of us catch some small fish and we put them in a cooler to use as bate for some bigger fish
• The fishing guide chops up the fish we caught before and uses them as bate
• He casts the bate into the Gulf and we wait
• A very large fish catches onto my dad’s bate and they both put up a big fight
• As my dad starts to win the struggle and gets the fish closer to the boat, the tour guide tells us that it was a shark about six feet long
• As my dad is about to pull the shark onto the boat, the line snaps and the shark darts away
• We wait for about another thirty minutes before we get another big fish
• This time it was my dad’s friend who had to put up a fight against the fish
• After a couple minutes, my dad’s friend pulls the fish onto the boat
• The fishing guide tells us that it was a tarpon weighing about 180 pounds
Rick Kubly
E.L.A.-2
February 24, 2011
Foodtopia
Far away, there lies the town of Foodtopia. This is a normal town with normal citizens. They have normal houses and normal malls. They have normal gardens and normal yard. Everything was normal except the fact that there were no restaurants or food markets. All their food comes from the sky.
In this town, breakfast falls from the sky like rain. Thick, fluffy pancakes pour down during breakfast, along with showers of cereal. Creamy milk, thick butter, and rich syrup fly down from the heavens to fill their bowls of cereal and to drown the pancakes. To finish off the meal, runny scrambled eggs descend from the sky. The townspeople then go off to do their daily activities as they wait for lunch.
At lunch, hotdogs drop down, already cooked, in their fluffy hotdog buns. Ketchup and mustard stream down, accompanying the hotdogs. Peanut butter and jelly sandwiches with bananas glide down. The people eat until they can eat no more. They then go home to wait for dinner.
When it is time for dinner, the volcano that rests in the middle of the town
My rebus story:
Once there was an upright
On the way to the
Rick Kubly
Reading 7
December 15, 2010
• My family goes to Captiva Island, off the coast of Florida, with some friends
• My dad decides to take his friend, his friend’s son named Will, and me on a fishing trip a couple of miles into the calm waters of the Gulf of Mexico
• All four of us catch some small fish and we put them in a cooler to use as bate for some bigger fish
• The fishing guide chops up the fish we caught before and uses them as bate
• He casts the bate into the Gulf and we wait
• A very large fish catches onto my dad’s bate and they both put up a big fight
• As my dad starts to win the struggle and gets the fish closer to the boat, the tour guide tells us that it was a shark about six feet long
• As my dad is about to pull the shark onto the boat, the line snaps and the shark darts away
• We wait for about another thirty minutes before we get another big fish
• This time it was my dad’s friend who had to put up a fight against the fish
• After a couple minutes, my dad’s friend pulls the fish onto the boat
• The fishing guide tells us that it was a tarpon weighing about 180 pounds
Rick Kubly
E.L.A.-2
February 24, 2011
Foodtopia
Far away, there lies the town of Foodtopia. This is a normal town with normal citizens. They have normal houses and normal malls. They have normal gardens and normal yard. Everything was normal except the fact that there were no restaurants or food markets. All their food comes from the sky.
In this town, breakfast falls from the sky like rain. Thick, fluffy pancakes pour down during breakfast, along with showers of cereal. Creamy milk, thick butter, and rich syrup fly down from the heavens to fill their bowls of cereal and to drown the pancakes. To finish off the meal, runny scrambled eggs descend from the sky. The townspeople then go off to do their daily activities as they wait for lunch.
At lunch, hotdogs drop down, already cooked, in their fluffy hotdog buns. Ketchup and mustard stream down, accompanying the hotdogs. Peanut butter and jelly sandwiches with bananas glide down. The people eat until they can eat no more. They then go home to wait for dinner.
When it is time for dinner, the volcano that rests in the middle of the town